Time to start learning about City Council candidates
Geoff West
Are you happy with the condition of the Costa Mesa streets? Are you
satisfied with the fact that we have yet another year with a budget
deficit? Are you pleased that the current City Council managed to
squander your tax dollars on developer giveaways and lawsuit
settlements in amounts that might have otherwise balanced the budget?
Are you comfortable that, despite the best efforts of an outstanding
city staff, the leadership of this city seems to operate like a leaf
in a windstorm -- going wherever the strongest wind blows it? Well,
there are 12 people in town who are about to tell you they have a
better way. Yep, a dozen. That’s how many candidates we have for the
three seats open on the Costa Mesa City Council this fall. Yikes!
Among the hopefuls, we have a former mayor, a parks and recreation
commissioner, two incumbent councilmen, three planning commissioners
and five neophytes.
So, how does a concerned resident sort them out? How do you decide
which, if any, of this mob deserves your votes? Since it’s unlikely
that this fine newspaper will simply let me tell you how to cast your
votes, I guess you will have to make up your own minds. Toward that
end, for starters, I suppose you could look at the record of each
candidate.
We’re very fortunate that half of the candidates hold elective or
appointive positions and another has previously been a councilwoman
and mayor. They have provided us with a track record to help us
decide whether they are fit to be among those brave souls charged
with providing direction to this city for the next decade or more.
We have many opportunities to watch them in action -- or inaction,
as the case may be. We can look at their voting records, examine
their positions on issues and make judgments about their leadership
abilities based on their current and past performance. We can ask
ourselves, for example, which of the incumbent councilmen running
this time has an outstanding record of public service and has proven
his mettle by taking on tough issues and providing leadership?
Conversely, which one consistently shows up unprepared and has failed
to meet even the most minimal expectations while in office?
In the case of the planning commissioners, how much weight do we
give to the fact that two of them have proven, throughout their
tenure, that they understand the complexities of the issues before
them and also demonstrated leadership ability as they served as
chairperson of the commission? How do we weigh the qualifications of
the other, a recent appointee who has already shown us he is willing
to put the city’s interests before his own? Has his time on the
commission and his experience as a volunteer given him enough
background to entrust the future of the city to him and those who
support his views?
How do you view a former mayor who inexplicably managed to lose
her seat two years ago by failing to be among the top two
vote-getters?
Do a brief few months on the Parks and Recreation Commission
provide enough seasoning for a person running for City Council? Does
the narrow focus of that commission prepare a person sufficiently to
handle the tougher, more time-consuming tasks encountered by the City
Council?
Perhaps the best choices will be found among the five new people,
but how do we evaluate them with no other public service to assess?
How do we determine what they bring to the race beyond good
intentions?
I guess we just have to try to sort out their statements in the
avalanche of campaign literature that will soon begin to clog our
mailboxes and keep our fingers crossed, right? Or -- here’s a novel
idea -- we could start paying attention to all the candidates this
campaign season. We can attend the candidate forums, the first of
which will be at the Neighborhood Community Center on Park Avenue at
7 p.m. on Wednesday --to try to get a handle on each one of them.
We can watch those who already have positions in government to
hear what they have to say as they do their jobs -- to measure their
skills and evaluate their positions on critical issues. We can learn
as much as possible about all the candidates, including the new
folks, by reading interviews and listening to their public comments
-- to determine if they have the vision, leadership, intellectual
capacity and stamina to do the job.
We can investigate the public records, to see who provides
financial backing for them -- and who might also provide a
philosophical foundation for their views. We can try to determine if
each candidate has what it takes to form the alliances so necessary
to accomplish anything on the City Council. In the recent past, we’ve
heard too much whining about “only being one vote.”
We can exercise our rights as citizens of this country and
residents of this city by studying the candidates and the issues that
face them, so we can make the best choices possible and not let
anyone talk us out of making each vote count. After all, the only
thing at stake is the future of this city.
* GEOFF WEST is a resident of Costa Mesa.
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